Anonymous wrote:Sure, if she wants to work the bake sale.
Seriously OP - once you quit, especially if you quit while young and relatively inexperienced, it is a LONG road back in.
pp here - we don't know what "back in" means. Doesn't sound like Big Law or neurosurgery to me. I quit and went skiing for five years once. The road back in was not very hard. Ask anyone who quit and went sailing until the money ran out. This terror of the unkown sacrifices so many lives to the 9-5 curse. Ya only go 'round once.
Anonymous wrote:All the SAHMs will say yes - they're wrong. Trust me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man up and take care of your family or turn in your man card.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man up and take care of your family or turn in your man card.
This is a really stupid, sexist post. I am a woman and have toyed with the idea of working PT. My DH is comfortable with this but we are unsure for all the reasons OP discusses. My benefits are very generous, so we would lose out not just on my salary but on the amazing amount of contributions to my 401K, low healthcare premiums, bonuses and other perks I receive.
OP, I really don't know what to tell you other than all of your concerns are well-founded and your points are well made. You sound like a wonderful husband, IMO. What I will say is that you two are still very young, doing very well (late 20's and already a salary of $170K? Wow.), and if your DW can find a way to keep her skills and resume fairly current as you suggest then the financial "hit" is something you can compensate for down the line. As you get older and have more kids, your priorities will change and there is no absolute "right" way to do this, only the way that is best for your family and your values.
Talk it over with your wife, share your concerns, and discuss together what you think is best for your family. Good luck. You guys are doing great and I think you'll be just fine whichever way you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. What kind of man are you? If you can't take care of your family on 6 figures then you aren't much of a man. Heck you don't even need that much. My husband would never make me work at a job I hated. I don't care if he made 30,000 a year- he would make it work so I could be happy.
I work because I want to. If I don't want to then I will stop. My husband does not need me to take care of our family financially but he appreciates whatever I want to do. And we are not rich or wealthy.
Sounds like you should have married one of the manly women on here who are sure to come to your defense and call your wife lazy. Or maybe you should have married your paycheck.
It doesn't matter...you are still acting like a punk.
This.
You sound like my ex-husband. And your attitude is why he is my ex-husband. I cannot fathom being married to someone who gave so little regard to his wife's desire to be home with her children for the very short amount of time that they are children (its not for everyone, but for those who want to do it) but to be FORCED to miss her babies' firsts over the matter of 1,000/month when her husband makes 150,000. I CANNOT imagine. I would, literally, never forgive you.
If she really makes 1,000 dollars a month - she can get a job making that ANY TIME. Does she have a college degree? She could make 100/day subbing in most school districts.
And I am quite sure that your wife is not telling you that she is fantasizing about lunching with the ladies (not that you'd fund such frivolity) but about being with her kids - your kids.
So glad I divorced my ex before we had any kids and married a real man. I'm home with my baby because I will never get this time back. My husband is happily paying the bills. Yes, a screaming baby can get frustrating but it is worth EVERY MINUTE.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a wife, currently supporting the family while my DH is on the LONG road back in after a break from the workforce for grad school. It's hard to be the sole breadwinner. And it's even harder to see my DH unhappy without being fully employed (some contract work fills some days and the job hunt is pretty full-time.)
Earlier posters who ask why she wants to leave are asking the right question in my view. I hated my last job with its miserable commute and the misery impacted our family so a job change was good for the whole family. I view my DH as a hero for working so hard to not let his misery not impact us in the same way. If your DW is miserable, explore whether being at home would be the right change or whether looking for something else first might be the right next step. You're young enough to likely recove financially from whichever path you take. (Though we hated the hit with one income, it's actually working out just fine.) so try to figure out what increases family happiness and contentment (hers, yours, the kids). Also take into account your own job security when thinking about this. Mine is pretty secure but if I were sweating bullets about that, being e sole breadwinner would be even harder.
You sound like a thoughtful guy. I hope you and your DW can talk honestly about the right next step.